The Assassin’s Tale
An original composition written byย John Clay Allenย to accompany this story
Inspired by Geoffrey Chaucer’sย The Canterbury Tales
An assassin am I, the destroyer of life
The essence of fear, the bringer of strife
A professional to be sure, many years have I labored
Many lives have I snuffed, with a conscience unwavered
My tale is brief, for it is as they say
Actions speak louder than words on any given day
Iโll tell of the night in a small, peaceful town
When the rivers ran red for miles around
And thousands of tears soaked into the ground
Oh, what happened that night in that small, peaceful town?
Not a soul survived to see the next day
But no soul could have lived with those memories anyway
Some say it was monsters, some say it was plague
But the truth is simple: โtwas an assassinโs blade
It is a mysterious thing, that men would pay
Gold coins to see lives washed away
Once there was a baker with a grudge against a smith
The baker’s hatred for the man eclipsed
All reason, rhyme, and rhythm in his mind
His brooding darkened with the passing time
His resentment ensured amends could not be made
So the baker resolved to see the smith laid in a grave
All the baker’s money was soon invested in
The most dangerous of menโa professional assassin
When the killer came to leave his mark
The night was cold, the moon was dark
And even the stars withheld their light
As if by some high power or might
They foresaw what would happen that terrible night
And closed their eyes to the awful sight
He was dressed all in black, a shadow was he
He slipped to the smithy, no eye could see
The front door yielded to his persuasive touch
For not a lock was made that troubled him much
The room was still warm from a dayโs work at the forge
On tables lay new axes and swords
The assassin ascended to the second floor
And crept along the hall to the second door
Death entered the bedroom, a life to take
But was stopped in its tracksโthe smith was awake
Their gazes met, the killer paused
And perhaps it was this hesitation that caused
The assassin to make his first mistake
His own principal rule he was about to break
Never speak with your victims, cursed is the man
Who converses with those whose lives he must ban
He must have seen something in the smithโs blue eye
That told him this man was not meant to die
And just for a moment, the killer let his thoughts go
To the hundreds he had murdered, some so long ago
And for the first time in his life, the assassin would feel
The smallest drop of pity for the men he had killed
The two exchanged words, and though they were brief
The assassin was movedโhe kept his steel sheathed
He left that night without drawing his blade
The smithโs life he had undeniably saved
As the assassin made his way back to the stable
Thoughts whirled through his headโhe was confused and disabled
So deep in thought, he could have walked into a limb
That is why the old manโs voice startled him
โWho are you and what do you want in my town?
โWhy do you lurk when no one else is around?
โI donโt much like young miscreants like you
โAnd just for that Iโm taking you to
โThe village jailโnow don’t try to run!
โYou can’t escape from the things that you’ve done!โ
And from the shadows emerged a man frail and old
Years of peace had made him so bold
He was equipped with no armor, but sported a straw hat
He was unarmed, save for the wooden staff in his grasp
The assassin would have laughed before striking him down
But he needed to get away, he hated this town
He didnโt feel like killingโif only he knewโฆ
โStand aside old fool, I have no business with youโ
โWell, well,โ the old man replied, โIโll have you know
โIโm Captain of Guards, and no one speaks to me soโ
โI said stand aside, I wonโt say it againโ
The assassin felt his anger returning again
And then from the darkness arose the captainโs guards
Four strong men, armored and armed
โIโve done nothing wrong!โ the assassin cried
โTake him away!โ the captain replied
Then the old man hit the assassinโhe swung his rod hard
The decrepit captain had played his last card
Eight inches of the coldest steel in the land
Found a place in his heartโthe staff dropped from his hand
And before that first body had hit the ground
God himself turned his face from that small, peaceful town
The guards were on the killer like flies on a bull
But were summarily slaughtered at the assassinโs will
The fight had caused quite a ruckus however
Every man in the town was awake in short measure
Candles were lit, shutters thrown wide
And every eye rested on the grisly scene outside
In a pool of blood stood a man clad in black
Five dead were at his feet, by some mishap
Tranquility had been shattered after decades of peace
And every villager arose to assault lifeโs thief
The doors flew open, the peasants emerged
Carrying torches and pitchforks, shouting vile words
They encircled that poor, wretched ghost of a man
A crowd of great number, like grains of sand
And above the curses that were shouted there
The threats of death and promises of despair
Rose a high, clear voiceโthe smith had climbed
To the top of a crateโhis voice was sublime
โDonโt hurt him you fools! Heโs saved my life!
โHeโs done a good deed this terrible night
โA dark man, to be sure, but his heart is good
โNow throw down your weapons, save yourselves if you would!โ
The mob jeered the smith, and the baker stepped forth
A curse left his lipsโhe felt no remorse
โQuiet, you dog! Close your treacherous mouth!
โWhat gold did you pay to buy this man out?
โIf a professional killer canโt damn one soul
โIโll do it myselfโmy blood runs cold!โ
And then the baker, with all his malice and hate
Plunged his dagger into the smith, and sealed his fate
As the assassin looked out and saw the smith die
A single crystal tear dropped from his eye
And that tear shook the foundations of the earth itself
For such compassion from a killer had never been felt
Then the bloodlust rose in the assassinโs eyes
A crimson tide filled him inside
Every ignorant fool in this village would die
Every woman and child would be made to cry
And what happened next, I cannot describe
Every soul that did in that village abide
Was precipitously slainโnot one survived
And the rivers bore despair far and wide
Like an artist he worked, the assassin that night
His blade was his brush, on a canvas of fright
Like a dancer he moved, on a nightmarish stage
None could stand before him, none arose to save
I wonโt mention details, Iโll simply say
That when the sun rose the very next day
A hundred bodies lay in the clay
Every soul in that village had been forced to play
The deadly game of courtship with fate
Most had learned far too late
That the wrath of an assassin is deadly as a blight
Colder than the winter, darker than the night
I know from me, many answers you seek
Am I the one of whom I speak?
Did I take all those lives that night?
Was it mine, or anotherโs plight?
These secrets and more, Iโll never tell
Iโll keep my silence โtill tolling of the bell
But perhaps Iโll see you again on some date
If a price paid in gold has sealed your fate
May God have mercy, for I will have none
Iโll meet you when my life is done
But until that day, Iโll faithful be
To the assassinsโ creed, โtis enough for me
And if you flee from deathโs dark, lonely veil
Hereโs to hoping youโve learned from my tale
If you trust in the light, you will only fail
For in the dark of night, only shadows prevail
Cover photo byย cocoparisienne onย Pixabay

Leave a reply to Annette Rey Cancel reply